BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to semiconductor devices including light-emitting diodes,
electronic devices, and semiconductor sensors, and to methods of manufacturing the
semiconductor devices; in particular the present invention relates to semiconductor
devices incorporating a reduced-dislocation-density GaN substrate, and to methods
of manufacturing such devices.
Description of the Related Art
[0002] Designing for improved characteristics in various GaN-substrate or other III-nitride-substrate
employing semiconductor devices, such as light-emitting diodes, electronic devices,
and semiconductor sensors, is demanding low dislocation density from the substrates.
[0005] Nevertheless, GaN crystal, and GaN substrates obtained from the crystal, grown by
the crystal growing methods of Non-Patent Literature 1 or Non-Patent Literature 2,
proved to be plagued with serious defects apart from dislocations, although the density
of the dislocations is in fact lowered to about 1 × 10
6 cm
-2. The defects were readily detected, inasmuch as the GaN substrate was etched with
an alkali, leaving it pitted. In particular, when a specular-polished (0001) Ga face
of a GaN substrate was etched for some tens of minutes in an aqueous KOH solution
at 50°C, the areas where defects were present were etched to a depth of several µm,
forming pits. Furthermore, etching the specular (0001) Ga face of the GaN substrate
with molten KOH, molten NaOH melt, or a molten KOH/NaOH mixture, pitted the Ga face
with roughly hexagonal columns, walled by N faces.
[0006] GaN is a crystal having polarity in the [0001] direction, and a characteristic trait
of GaN crystal is that its (0001) Ga faces are not readily etched with alkalis, whereas
its (0001) N faces are readily alkali-etched. From this perspective, it is apparent
that the GaN crystal and GaN substrate discussed above have two types of domains that
differ in polarity. The two domains are defined as the principal domain (matrix),
which is the majority, polarity-determining domain of GaN crystal and GaN substrates,
and inversion domains, which are domains in which the polarity in the [0001] direction
is inverted with respect to the matrix. This means that on a (0001) Ga face that is
the principal plane of a GaN substrate, both the (0001) Ga face of the matrix as well
as (0001) N faces of inversion domains appear. Therefore, when a (0001) Ga face that
is the principal plane of a GaN crystal is etched, the inversion domains become more
etched than the matrix, such that approximately hexagonal columnar pits form from
the inversion domains. In other words, the hexagonal columnar pits are pits that originate
in the inversion domains.
[0007] Meanwhile, along the principal plane of a GaN substrate, pits originating in dislocations
are not the result of etching with KOH solution at 50°C for some tens of minutes,
but are the result of etching with the molten KOH/NaOH mixture. Yet since they are
in the form of hexagonal pyramids having ridgelines, pits originating in dislocations
are readily distinguished from pits originating in inversion domains. It should be
noted that, other than by the etching mentioned above, the principal and inversion
domains can be readily distinguished from each other also by cathodoluminescence (CL),
or by observation under a florescence microscope, because the luminosities of the
two domains differ distinctly.
[0008] In implementations in which GaN crystal is grown on a non-native substrate, a low-temperature
buffer layer is generally formed on the non-native substrate, as is the case in Non-Patent
Literatures 1 and 2, but in thus growing GaN crystal on a non-native substrate with
a low-temperature buffer layer intervening, inversion domains inevitably form. This
has meant that general GaN crystal will contain inversion domains.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] Accordingly, an object of the present invention, brought about in order to resolve
issues such as discussed above, is to make available semiconductor device manufacturing
methods, whereby evaluating impact of the presence and sizes of the inversion domains
on the properties of a semiconductor device manufactured by forming on a typical GaN
crystal substrate a plurality of semiconductor layers leads to high-yield manufacturing
of semiconductor devices having superior characteristics.
[0010] One aspect of the present invention is a semiconductor device manufacturing method
comprising: a step of preparing a GaN substrate having a ratio
St l S, of collective area
Stcm
2 of inversion domains to total area
S cm
2 of the GaN substrate principal face, of no more than 0.5, with the density along
the (0001) Ga face, being the GaN substrate principal face, of inversion domains whose
surface area where the polarity in the [0001] direction is inverted with respect to
the matrix is 1 µm
2 or more being
D cm
-2; and a step of growing on the GaN substrate principal face an at least single-lamina
semiconductor layer to form a semiconductor device in which the product
Sc ×
D of the surface area
Sc of the semiconductor device principal face and the inversion-domain density
D is made less than 2.3.
[0011] Furthermore, in the semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present
invention, the ratio
St/
S can be made 0.2 or less, and the product
Sc×
D less than 0.7. Additionally, the ratio
St/
S can be brought to 0.05 or less, and the product
Sc×
D to less than 0.1. Still further, the area of the GaN substrate principal face may
be made 10 cm
2 or more. The GaN substrate can be manufactured also by vapor phase techniques. Herein,
among vapor-phase techniques, hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) can be utilized.
[0012] The present invention in another aspect is a semiconductor device manufactured by
the above manufacturing method.
[0013] According to the present invention, semiconductor device manufacturing methods whereby
semiconductor devices having superior characteristics are manufactured at high yields
are made available.
[0014] From the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings,
the foregoing and other objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention
will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015]
Fig. 1A, in a schematic diagram representing a GaN-substrate preparation step in a
semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is an outline
upper-surface view illustrating a GaN substrate;
Fig. 1B, in a schematic diagram representing a GaN-substrate preparation step in a
semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is an outline
sectional view taken along the line IB-IB in Fig. 1A, seen in the direction of the
arrows;
Fig. 2A, in a schematic diagram representing the semiconductor-layer growth step in
a semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is an
outline upper-surface view illustrating a semiconductor wafer;
Fig. 2B, in a schematic diagram representing the semiconductor-layer growth step in
a semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is an
outline sectional view taken along the line IIB-IIB in Fig. 2A, seen in the direction
of the arrows;
Fig. 3A, in a schematic diagram representing a semiconductor-device formation step
in a semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is
an outline upper-surface view illustrating a semiconductor wafer;
Fig. 3B, in a schematic diagram representing a semiconductor-device formation step
in a semiconductor device manufacturing method involving the present invention, is
an outline sectional view taken along the line IIIB-IIIB in Fig. 3A;
Fig. 4 is an outline section diagram illustrating one embodiment of a semiconductor
device involving the present invention;
Fig. 5 is a graph representing the relationship between the presence of an inverted
polarity layer within the GaN substrate of a semiconductor device, and the device's
reverse breakdown voltage; and
Fig. 6 is a graph representing the relationship between the surface area of inversion
domains along the principal face of a semiconductor-device GaN substrate, and the
properties of the semiconductor device.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Embodiment mode 1
[0016] With reference to Fig. 1 through Fig. 3, one embodiment mode of a semiconductor device
manufacturing method involving the present invention includes: a step of preparing
a GaN substrate 10 having a ratio
St/
S of collective area
Stcm
2 of inversion domains 10
t to the total surface area
S cm
2 of the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10, of no more than 0.5, with the density along the (0001) Ga
face, being principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10, of inversion domains 10
t whose surface area where the polarity in the [0001] direction is inverted with respect
to the matrix 10
s is 1 µm
2 or more being
D cm
-2 (Fig. 1); and a step of growing on the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 an at least single-lamina semiconductor layer 20 to form
semiconductor devices 40, in which the product
Sc ×
D of the area
Sc of the principal faces 40
m of the semiconductor devices 40 and the density
D of the inversion domains 10
t is made less than 2.3 (Figs. 2 and 3).
[0017] Including these steps makes it possible to afford semiconductor device manufacturing
methods whereby semiconductor devices having superior characteristics are manufactured
at high yields. Below, these features are explained in detail.
[0018] First, a study of the relationship between the presence of the inversion domains
that a GaN substrate in a semiconductor device has and the properties of the semiconductor
device was made. Referring to Fig. 4, as a semiconductor layer 20, a 0.6 µm-thick
n+-type GaN layer 22, a 7 µm-thick
n-type GaN layer 24 (with an electron concentration of 3 × 10
16 cm
-3), and a 0.5 µm-thick
p-type GaN layer 26 (with an Mg atom concentration of 7 × 10
17 cm
-3) were formed on the principal face 10
m of a 400 µm-thick
n-type GaN substrate (the GaN substrate 10) in which the locations of inversion domains
was comprehended. (The density of the inversion domains on the substrate principal
face was 20 cm
-2, and the surface area of the inversion domains was 1 to 10,000 µm
2). A
p-n junction, being the semiconductor device principal faces 40
m, was thus formed between the
n-type GaN layer 24 and the
p-type GaN layer 26. Next, an Ni/Au laminated electrode, serving as a
p-side electrode 32, was formed onto the
p-type GaN substrate 26, and a Ti/Al laminated electrode, serving as an
n-side electrode 34, was formed onto the back side 10
n (the side opposite from the principal face 10
m) of the
n-type GaN substrate (the GaN substrate 10), to produce the semiconductor devices 40,
whose principal faces 40
m had a surface area of 1 cm
2.
[0019] As to the produced semiconductor devices 40, referring to Fig. 5, a study of the
relationship between the presence of inverted polarity layers within the GaN substrate
10 and reverse breakdown voltage was made. Herein, "reverse breakdown voltage" means
the voltage at which, when a voltage is applied in the reverse direction to a semiconductor
device (the voltage thus applied is termed the reverse applied voltage), the semiconductor
device is destroyed, and the leakage-current density rapidly increases. In Fig. 5,
the horizontal axis represents the reverse applied voltage (V), and the vertical axis
represents the leakage current density (A/cm
2).
[0020] As illustrated in Fig. 5, in the semiconductor devices, in Group
A, whose GaN substrates had inversion domains, the reverse breakdown voltage lowered
remarkably, compared with that of the semiconductor devices, in Group
B, whose GaN substrates did not have inversion domains. From these results it was apparent
that the properties of semiconductor devices having within the GaN substrate inversion
domains whose surface area along the principal face is 1 to 10,000 µm
2 were pronouncedly compromised.
[0021] Next, referring to Fig. 6, a study of the relationship between the surface area of
inversion domains along the GaN substrate principal face in a semiconductor device,
and the semiconductor device properties was made. In Fig. 6, the horizontal axis represents
the surface area of the inversion domains along the GaN substrate principal face (units:
µm
2), the vertical axis represents the leakage-current density (A / cm
2), the dot-and-dash line
E represents the average leakage-current density in a semiconductor device in which
the GaN substrate has no inversion domains, and the double-dot-and-dash line
F represents full-scale leakage current density. Herein, the reverse applied voltage
was made 100V.
[0022] As illustrated in Fig. 6, the leak current density in the semiconductor device gradually
rose when the surface area of the inversion domains along the GaN substrate principal
face increased to 1 µm
2 or more, and the leakage-current density rose drastically when the area increased
to 5 µm
2 or more. The possible reason is that in growing epitaxially a semiconductor layer
on the GaN substrate principal face with the area of the inversion domains being kept
under 5 µm
2 in the semiconductor layer (not illustrated), low growth rate domains grown on the
inversion domains are buried by (not-illustrated) high growth rate domains grown on
the principal domain in the semiconductor layer, and thus the inversion domains are
not passed to the working portion (for example, the
p-n junction) of the semiconductor device.
[0023] The results of Figs. 5 and 6 demonstrated that the presence of the inversion domains
where of surface area along the semiconductor principal face of 1 µm
2 or more adversely affected the semiconductor device properties. Accordingly, with
attention being directed to the inversion domains whose surface area along the semiconductor-device
principal face is 1 µm
2 or more, the following study will be carried out.
[0024] Referring to Fig. 3, the relationship between the density
D (units: cm
-2) of the inversion domains whose surface area along the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 is 1µm
2 or more, and the area
Sc (units: cm
2) of the principal faces 40
m of the semiconductor devices 40 is believed to be as follows. Namely, the likelihood
that no inversion domains are present within the principal faces 40
m of any semiconductor devices 40 formed on the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 (in other words, the yield with which semiconductor devices
(products) of good physical properties are manufactured) is 10% when the product
Sc ×
D is 2.3, 50% when the product
Sc ×
D is 0.7, and 90% when the product
Sc ×
D is 0.1, wherein the probability depends on the product of the area
Sc cm
2 of the principal faces 40
m of the semiconductor deices 40 and the density
D cm
-2 of the inversion domains 10
t along the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10. Herein, from the perspective of industrial applicability,
the yield rate should exceed 10%. Accordingly, the product
Sc ×
D is necessarily 2.3, preferably less than 0.7, and more preferably less than 0.1.
[0025] What is considered for above conditions on the product
Sc×
D is only the density of the inversion domains along the GaN substrate principal face,
not their area. More precisely, in the situation in which the surface area of each
inversion domain is small, semiconductor device yield can be governed solely by the
conditions on the product
Sc ×
D, but in situations in which the surface area of each inversion domain is large, an
evaluation of the inversion-domain surface area must be included. Herein, the diversity
of surface areas is prohibitive of specifying the surface areas of the inversion domains
individually.
[0026] Therefore, in calculating the likelihood that no inversion domains are present within
the principal faces of any semiconductor devices formed on the GaN substrate principal
face (in other words, the yield with which semiconductor devices of good physical
properties are manufactured), referring to Fig. 1, the relationship between the total
area
S (units: cm
2) of the GaN substrate principal face and the collective area
St (units: cm
2), along the GaN substrate principal face, of the inversion domains 10
t was taken into consideration. That is, the probability that no inversion domains
are present varies depending on the ratio
St / S of the collective area
St cm
2 of the inversion domains to the total area S cm
2 of the GaN substrate principal face-the larger the ratio
St / S, the lower the probability, and the smaller the
St / S, the higher the probability.
[0027] In the calculation of the probability that no inversion domains are present, making
the probability 10% when the product
Sc ×
D is 2.3 requires bringing the ratio
St / S to 0.5 or less, making the probability 50% when the product
Sc ×
D is 0.7 requires bringing the ratio
St / S to 0.2 or less, and raising the probability to 90% when the product
Sc ×
D is 0.1 requires reducing the ratio
St / S to 0.05 or less. Accordingly, the ratio
St / S is necessarily made 0.5 or less, preferably 0.2 or less, and more preferably
0.05 or less.
[0028] Hereinafter, specifically, the semiconductor device manufacturing method of this
embodiment will be described, based on Fig. 1 through Fig. 3. For reference, in Fig.
1 and Fig. 2, the alternate long and two short dashes lines represent chip-dividing
lines 41 for dividing in Fig. 3 a semiconductor wafer 30 into chips.
[0029] First, referring to Fig. 1, the GaN substrate 10 whose principal face 10
m is (0001) Ga face is prepared (a step of preparing a GaN substrate). In the GaN substrate
10, the density of the inversion domains 10
t, where the extent of the area, along the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10, in which the polarity in the [0001] direction is inverted
with respect to the principal domain 10
s of the GaN substrate 10 is 1 µm
2 or more, is D cm
-2. Furthermore, the GaN substrate 10 has a ratio
St/
S, of collective area
Stcm
2 of the collective inversion domains 10
t to the total area
S cm
2 of the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10, of no more than 0.5. For example, as illustrated in Fig.
1, the inversion domains 10
t comprises five inversion domains 10
t1, 10
t2, 10
t3, 10
t4, and 10
t5, which have different areas S
t1, S
t2, S
t3, S
t4, and S
t5. The collective area
St of the inversion domains 10
t is sum of the areas S
t1, S
t2, S
t3, S
t4, and S
t5 of the inversion domains 10
t1, 10
t2, 10
t3, 10
t4, and 10
t5.
[0030] Because in the GaN substrate, the ratio
St /S of the collective area
St cm
2 of the inversion domains 10
t to the total area S cm
2 of the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 is 0.5 or less, the yield of semiconductor devices formed
on this substrate can be heightened. Therein, the ratio
St / S is preferably 0.2 or less, and more preferably 0.1 or less. Furthermore, as described
hereinafter, forming semiconductor devices having principal faces whose areas are
ideal for density
Dc of the inversion domains where the area along the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 is 1 µm
2 or more heightens the semiconductor device yield.
[0031] From the perspective of manufacturing a large number of semiconductor devices efficiently,
the area of the principal face 10
m on the GaN substrate 10 is preferably 10 cm
2 or more.
[0032] Methods of manufacturing such a GaN substrate are not limited particularly, wherein
the examples of the manufacturing methods include HVPE, matalorganic chemical vapor
deposition (MOCVD), and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), and other vapor-phase techniques,
and flux-growth and other liquid-phase techniques. There are not any inversion domains
discernible on the GaN substrate manufactured by the liquid-phase techniques, but
from the perspective of producing large size of crystals at a high growth rate, the
vapor-phase techniques are preferable, and in particular HVPE is more preferable.
Moreover, because the GaN substrate 10 manufactured by HVPE is often provided with
the inversion domains, the present invention is characterized in that controlling
the inversion domains leads to high-yield manufacturing of semiconductor devices having
superior characteristics.
[0033] In manufacturing the GaN substrate by HVPE, possible procedures for reducing the
inversion domains that the GaN substrate has are as follows. Among the procedures,
there is a procedure in which a GaN crystal is grown by HVPE on a GaN base substrate,
produced by liquid-phase techniques, having no inversion domains. In this procedure,
however, a large size of GaN base substrate cannot be produced. Furthermore, there
is a procedure in which mask layers are formed in the inversion domains on the GaN
base substrate, and then the GaN crystal is grown by HVPE to cover the mask layers
with the GaN crystal that has been laterally grown. In such a procedure, however,
the mask layers are unlikely to form so as to be in correspondence with the inversion
domains present randomly on the GaN base substrate.
[0034] Therefore, effective is a procedure in which after pits form as a result of etching
the inversion domains on the principal face of the GaN substrate, produced by the
vapor-phase techniques, having the inversion domains on its principal face, growing
the GaN crystal by HVPE prompts burying of the inversion domain having low crystal
growth rate in the principal domain having high crystal growth rate. Herein, from
the perspective of prompting the burying of the inversion domains, the depth of the
pits in the inversion domains of the GaN base substrate is preferably larger than
the widths (that are the diameters of approximate circles when the inversion domains
can be approximated to the circles, and that are widths of stripes when the domains
are shaped into the stripes) of the inversion domains. Herein, in etch, material of
etch resistance, such as Pt board, is preferably placed on the back side (the side
opposite to the front side, hereinafter) in order to prevent the back side of the
GaN base substrate from being etched.
[0035] Next, referring to Fig. 2, an at least single-lamina semiconductor layer 20 is grown
on the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 (a step of growing a semiconductor layer), and referring
to Fig. 3, a semiconductor devices 40 are formed so that the product
Sc ×
D of the area
Sc of the principal faces of the semiconductor devices 40 and the density
D of the inversion domains is 2.3 or less (a step of forming a semiconductor device).
[0036] With this product
Sc ×
D being 2.3 or less, preferably 0.7 or less, and more preferably 0.1 or less, semiconductor
device yields can be heightened.
[0037] Herein, in the semiconductor layer growing step in Fig 2, a
n+-type GaN layer 22, a
n-type GaN layer 24 and a
p-type GaN layer 26 are successively formed as the at least single-lamina semiconductor
layer 20 on the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10. As a result, the
p-n junction forms between the
n-type GaN layer 24 and the
p-type GaN layer 26. Next, a Ni/Au laminated electrode (the Ni layer contacts with
the GaN layer), serving as a
p-side electrode 32, is formed onto the
p-type GaN substrate 26, and a Ti/Al laminated electrode (the Ti layer contacts with
the
n-type GaN substrate), serving as a
n-side electrode 34, is formed onto a back side 10
n (the side opposite to the principal face 10
m) of the
n-type GaN substrate (GaN substrate 10), to produce a semiconductor wafer 30.
[0038] Furthermore, in the semiconductor device forming step in Fig. 3, the
p-side electrode 32,
p-type GaN layer 26, and a part of the
n-type GaN layer 24 undergo mesa-etching along chip dividing lines 41. Subsequently,
the semiconductor wafer 30 is divided along the chip dividing lines 41 into the semiconductor
devices 40, in which the areas of their principal faces are
Sc cm
2. For example, as illustrated in Fig. 3, the one semiconductor wafer 30 is divided
into 10 chips
C1 to
C10 to manufacture 10 semiconductor devices 40.
[0039] Herein, the principal faces 40
m on the semiconductor devices 40 mean principal faces of the main portion (functional
portion) activating the function of the semiconductor devices. In the semiconductor
device of this embodiment, the
p-
n junction corresponds to the principal faces 40
m. Although with the principal faces 40
m of the manufactured semiconductor devices 40 being small, the inversion domains 10
t that the GaN substrate 10 has is not so much disadvantageous, the larger the principal
faces 40
m of the semiconductor devices 40, the more disadvantageous the inversion domains 10
t. Accordingly, the present invention is useful particularly in manufacturing the large
size of semiconductor devices 40 in which the areas of their principal faces 40
m are 1mm
2 or more.
[0040] In this embodiment mode, the recitation has been made on the precondition that the
principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 in the semiconductor devices 40 is (0001) Ga face, though
in practice, the principal face 10
m of the GaN substrate 10 may have a slightly misoriented angle with respect to the
(0001) Ga face.
Embodiment Mode2
[0041] Another embodiment mode of the semiconductor device involving the present invention
is a semiconductor device manufactured by the manufacturing method in Embodiment Mode
1. In the semiconductor device of Embodiment Mode 2, referring to Fig. 4, the
n+-type GaN layer 22,
n-type GaN layer 24 and
p-type GaN layer 26 are formed as the at least single-laminar semiconductor layer 20
on the GaN substrate 10. Furthermore, the Ni/Au laminated electrode, serving as the
p-side electrode 32, is formed onto the
p-type GaN substrate 26, and the Ti/Al laminated electrode, serving as the
n-side electrode 34, is formed onto the back side 10
n of the
n-type GaN substrate.
[0042] With reference to Fig.1 through Fig. 4, semiconductor devices of this embodiment
are the semiconductor devices 40, in which the areas of their principal faces 40
m are
Sc cm
-2, formed employing the GaN substrate 10 in which the density of the inversion domains
10
t, where the area along the principal face 10
m is 1 µm
2 or more, is
D cm
-2, the total area of the principal face 10
m is
S cm
2, and the collective area of the inversion domains 10
t is
St cm
-2. Because the ratio
St/
S is 0.5 or less, and the product
Sc ×
D is less than 2.3, the properties of semiconductor devices can be enhanced. Therein,
preferably, the ratio
St / S is 0.2 or less, and the product
Sc ×
D is less than 0.7, and more preferably, the ratio
St /
S is 0.05 or less, and the product
Sc ×
D is less than 0.1.
Embodiments
Embodiment 1
1. Preparation of GaN substrate
[0043] As a base substrate, the GaN substrate in which (0001) Ga face, whose diameter was
2 inches (50.8 mm), and whose depth was 400 µm, was the principal face was employed.
As a result of etching for 30 minutes the principal face of the base substrate with
a mixture of KOH and NaOH (mass ratio: 1 : 1) at 300°C, 352 pits in hexagonal cylinder
shape formed in the inversion domains on the principal face. During etch, keeping
a Pt board in close contact with the back side (the side opposite to the front side)
of the base substrate prevented etching solution from running into the back side of
the base substrate. The hexagonal-cylinder-shaped pits caused by the etching were
20 µm to 100 µm in width (diameter of the approximate circles), and 20 µm to 250 µm
in depth.
[0044] A GaN crystal layer 10 mm in thickness was grown by HVPE on the base substrate principal
face in which the hexagonal-cylinder-shaped pits had formed. Herein, the temperature
at which Ga source gas was generated was made 850°C, and the temperature at which
a GaN crystal was grown was 1200°C. An added feature of the experimental design was
to make the GaN substrate growing temperature 1000°C or more, which reduced the inversion
domains as the GaN crystal grew.
[0045] The grown GaN crystal layer was sliced paralleling the base substrate principal face
to a thickness of 500 µm to produce 10 GaN substrates whose principal faces are (0001)
Ga faces. These substrates were defined as
S1,
S2,
S3,
S4,
S5,
S6,
S7,
S8,
S9, and
S10 from the substrate side. In all the GaN substrates, the diameter of their principal
faces was 2 inches (5.08 cm), and the area Sof their principal faces was 20 cm
2.
[0046] The produced GaN substrates were etched for 30 minutes with predetermined KOH solution
at 50°C, and the number of the pits (corresponding to the inversion domains) formed
on the principal faces was counted, to calculate the density
D cm
-2 of the inversion domains on the principal faces. The density
D cm
-2 of the inversion domain on the principal faces of the more distant GaN substrates
(the substrates produced from a further grown part of the crystal) from the base substrate
side further lowered. Herein, as to each of the GaN substrates, the precise collective
area of the inversion domains was not measured. The collective area
St cm
2 of the inversion domains was calculated, letting the area of each of the inversion
domains was 0.196 cm
2 of less, because the width of each of the inversion domains (the diameter of the
approximate circle) was 500 µm or less (the area was 0.196 cm
2 of less). The results are set forth in the table.
2. Semiconductor layer growth
[0047] Referring to Fig. 2, the principal faces 10
m of the GaN substrates 10 were polished again, and then the 0.6 µm-thick
n+-type GaN layer 22, 7 µm-thick
n-type GaN layer 24 (electron concentration was 3 × 10
16 cm
-3), and 0.5 µm-thick
p-type GaN layer 26 (Mg atomic concentration was 7 × 10
17 cm
-3) were formed by MOCVD as the semiconductor layer 20 on the principal faces 10 that
had been polished again. As a result, the
p-n junction formed between the
n-type GaN layer 24 and the
p-type GaN layer 26. Subsequently, a Ni layer and an Au layer were formed successively
by vapor-deposition techniques to form a Ni/Au laminated electrode, serving as the
p-side electrode 32, on the
p-type GaN layer 26. As a result, a semiconductor wafer 30 was produced for each of
the GaN substrates 10.
3. Semiconductor device formation
[0048] Referring to Fig. 3, in the semiconductor wafer 30, the
p-side electrode 32,
p-type GaN layer 26, and a part of the
n-type GaN layer 24 undergone mesa-etching along the chip dividing lines 41. Subsequently,
the semiconductor wafer was divided along the chip dividing lines 41 into 10 chips
C1 to
C10 to produce from the wafer 30 10 semiconductor devices 40, in which the area of
the principal faces 40
m (the
p-n junction in this embodiment) was 1 cm
2. The produced 10 semiconductor devices undergone reverse breakdown voltage test,
and the semiconductor device yield (units: %) was evaluated on the preconditions that
semiconductor devices with reverse breakdown voltage of 500 V or more were products.
The results are set forth in the table.
Table
GaN substrate |
GaN substrate principal face surface area S(cm2) |
Number of inversion domains |
Density of inversion domains D(cm-2) |
Collective area of inversion domains St(cm2) |
Ratio St/S |
Semicon. device principal face surface area Sc (cm2) |
Product Sc×D |
Semiconductor device yield (%) |
S1 |
20 |
51 |
2.55 |
≦10.0 |
≦0.50 |
1 |
2.55 |
0 |
S2 |
20 |
45 |
2.25 |
≦8.8 |
≦0.44 |
1 |
2.25 |
10 |
S3 |
20 |
35 |
1.75 |
≦6.9 |
≦0.35 |
1 |
1.75 |
20 |
S4 |
20 |
16 |
0.80 |
≦3.1 |
≦0.16 |
1 |
0.80 |
40 |
S5 |
20 |
12 |
0.60 |
≦2.4 |
≦0.12 |
1 |
0.60 |
60 |
S6 |
20 |
5 |
025 |
≦0.98 |
≦0.05 |
1 |
0.25 |
80 |
S7 |
20 |
4 |
0.20 |
≦0.78 |
≦0.04 |
1 |
0.20 |
80 |
S8 |
20 |
3 |
0.15 |
≦0.59 |
≦0.03 |
1 |
0.15 |
90 |
S9 |
20 |
1 |
0.05 |
≦0.20 |
≦0.01 |
1 |
0.05 |
100 |
S10 |
20 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
100 |
[0049] As is clear from the table, in the semiconductor device manufacturing method involving
the present invention, making the ratio
St /
S 0.5 or less and the product
Sc ×
D less than 2.3 could bring the semiconductor device yield to 10% or more. Furthermore,
making the ratio
St /
S 0.2 or less and the product
Sc ×
D less than 0.7 could bring the semiconductor device yield to 50% or more. Moreover,
lowering the ratio
St /
S to 0.05 or less and the product
Sc ×
D to less than 0.1 could raise the semiconductor device yield to 90 % or more.
[0050] The presently disclosed embodiments and implementation examples should in all respects
be considered to be illustrative and not limiting. The scope of the patent claims,
and is intended to include meanings equivalent to the scope of the patent claims and
all modifications within the scope.